The ocean provides food, economic activity, and cultural value for a large proportion of humanity. Our knowledge of marine ecosystems lags behind that of terrestrial ecosystems, limiting effective protection of marine resources. We describe the outcome of 2 workshops in 2011 and 2012 to establish a list of important questions, which, if answered, would substantially improve our ability to conserve and manage the world's marine resources. Participants included individuals from academia, government, and nongovernment organizations with broad experience across disciplines, marine ecosystems, and countries that vary in levels of development. Contributors from the fields of science, conservation, industry, and government submitted questions to our workshops, which we distilled into a list of priority research questions. Through this process, we identified 71 key questions. We grouped these into 8 subject categories, each pertaining to a broad component of marine conservation: fisheries, climate change, other anthropogenic threats, ecosystems, marine citizenship, policy, societal and cultural considerations, and scientific enterprise. Our questions address many issues that are specific to marine conservation, and will serve as a road map to funders and researchers to develop programs that can greatly benefit marine conservation.
Journal article
Seventy-one questions of global importance for the conservation of marine biological diversity
Conservation Biology, Vol.28(5), pp.1206-1214
2014
Published (Version of record)CC BY-NC-ND V3.0, Open
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Abstract
Details
- Title
- Seventy-one questions of global importance for the conservation of marine biological diversity
- Creators
- E CM Parsons - George Mason UniversityBrett Favaro - Simon Fraser UniversityA Alonso Aguirre - George Mason UniversityAmy L Bauer - George Mason UniversityLouise K Blight - University of British ColumbiaJohn A Cigliano - Cedar Crest College, USAMelinda A Coleman - New South Wales Department of Primary Industries, NSW FisheriesIsabelle M Cote - Simon Fraser UniversityMegan DraheimStephen Fletcher - Plymouth UniversityMelissa M Foley - Stanford UniversityRebecca Jefferson - Plymouth UniversityMiranda C Jones - University of British ColumbiaBrendan P Kelaher - Southern Cross UniversityCarolyn J Lundquist - National Institute of Water & Atmospheric Research LtdJulie-Beth McCarthyAnne NelsonKatheryn Patterson - George Mason UniversityLeslie Walsh - National Geographic Society, WashingtonAndrew J Wright - George Mason UniversityWilliam J Sutherland - University of Cambridge
- Publication Details
- Conservation Biology, Vol.28(5), pp.1206-1214
- Identifiers
- 3560; 991012821875502368
- Academic Unit
- School of Environment, Science and Engineering; Marine Ecology Research Centre; Faculty of Science and Engineering
- Resource Type
- Journal article